On 01.12.2025 14:47 Chris Woodfield via NANOG <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Now, if I want to assign static addresses for devices within my home
> network, I don’t have a problem with v4 - everything’s RFC1918, so if
> the public IP changes, NBD, and I can even do it with DHCP client
> IDs. However, if my IPv6 PD changes and my home devices all have GUAs
> assigned via SLAAC, then… guess what - every IPv6 device address in
> my network just changed. Oops.
> 
> Practically, I’ve worked around this by manually assigning LUAs to
> the devices that need static v6 addresses, like my SAN and the
> machines that do NFS mounts from it. But 1. that’s more than
> annoyingly clunky - hardly the improved experience that IPv6 promised
> - and 2. weren’t we trying to get away from LUAs in the first place?

That is something your ISP is intentionally doing - unrelated to the
IPv6 specification.
There is no technical reason not to give a static net to a customer, it
doesn't cost more (although some ISP charge for that).

I have a static IPv6 /48 net at home and I only remember those
addresses. IPv4 is still there because servers need to be reachable,
but I do not remember the addresses, too nasty. :-)

-- 
kind regards
Marco

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